"So the worst is yet to come and there is no way out. And I would suggest to people as they look around the world at the geopolitical problems that are going on and how so many countries are becoming police states — under the guise of terrorism — that they ask themselves: Are these countries really afraid of terrorism or are they afraid of their own populations that are losing everything and will take to the streets? Because that’s what we see coming. We see a global collapse. There’s no recovery — it’s been a coverup.”

The Department of Justice has announced
that it will be ending its Equitable Sharing Program. The Washington
Post reports
that the Equitable Sharing Program “has enabled local and state
police to make seizures and then have them ‘adopted’ by federal
agencies, which share in the proceeds. The program allowed police
departments and drug task forces to keep up to 80 percent of the
proceeds of the adopted seizures, with the rest going to federal
agencies.”
The end of this federal program is a good step in the right
direction. Though, there are some exceptions
to the no seizure rule and police can still seize private property
under their own state laws.

Civil asset forfeiture laws have allowed police departments to
seize private property from people suspected of a crime, sell it for
profit, and use the proceeds to fund their operation.The real kicker
is that one does not technically need to be convicted of a crime or
even arrested to permanently lose their property.
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